Matchbook: Essays in DeconstructionStanford University Press, 2005 - 221 pagina's Matchbook consists of nine essays written around, or in response to, work published by Jacques Derrida since 1980. The focal point of the essays is the "Envois," which forms part of Derrida's Post Card. Particular attention is paid to how that text articulates with the ethical and political emphases of Derrida's more recent work, but also to its autobiographical conceit. The "incendiary" reference of the book's title underscores deconstruction's engagement with questions of reading: relations between (slow) reading and the speed of technology, and the political effects of an internationalized deconstruction in a globalized culture. It is in terms of what deconstruction can have us think about the speed of technology and technologies of reading that Derrida's work has made one of its most important contributions to philosophy and literary and cultural studies. The book concentrates on that as proof of the continued relevance of such work. |
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abyss acronym adestination aesthetic America anagrammatical analysis aporetic aporia arrive articulation beginning Bernard Stiegler called Card chapter conception concerning context Critique deconstruction Derrida's text Derridean developed différance discourse discussion Dissemination effect Emmanuel Levinas Envois essay ethics everything explicit extent fact frame French function Gift of Death Giorgio Agamben gives house dust mites instant Jacques Derrida Jean-Luc Nancy Kant Kant's language letter linguistic literature logic Maurice Blanchot means Monolingualism narrative necessarily never obliquity one's originary passion Peggy Kamuf perhaps Philippe Sollers philosophy photographs political pose possibility Post postal postcard precisely prosthesis prosthetic purloined letter question reader reading refer relation response Right of Inspection secrecy secret sense signature simply sneeze Sollers space speak Specters of Marx speed story structure syntagm textual thing tion tongue trans Truth in Painting undecidability University Press utterance word writing